Saturday, March 21, 2020

French Verb Conjugations for Agacer (to Annoy)

French Verb Conjugations for Agacer (to Annoy) When you want to say to annoy in French, you will use the verb  agacer. You can also conjugate the verb to say annoyed or annoying, though this is a tricky one to work with. No worries, this lesson will walk you through the many conjugations of agacer. Conjugating the French Verb  Agacer In order to change  agacer  to take on the meaning of someone who annoyed or is annoying,  a verb conjugation is necessary. The French endings are more complex than the English -ed and -ing and  agacer  is a bit of a challenge. Agacer  is a  spelling change verb, which is common with the ending -cer. You will notice that some of the conjugations use a c while others use the cedilla à §.  This is done to ensure that the pronunciation of a soft C is used as the vowel that follows it changes. Using the chart, you can learn which form of  agacer  is required to match the subject pronoun and tense of your sentence. For example, I annoy is jagace while we will annoy is nous agacerons. Subject Present Future Imperfect j agace agacerai agaais tu agaces agaceras agaais il agace agacera agaait nous agaons agacerons agacions vous agacez agacerez agaciez ils agacent agaceront agaaient The Present Participle of  Agacer The  present participle  for agacer  is agaà §ant. Notice again how the cedilla appeared before the A to keep the C soft.  Agaà §ent  can be used as a verb and it also works as an adjective, gerund, or noun if needed. The Passà © Composà © and Past Participle Rather than using the imperfect, you can express the past tense with  passà © composà ©. For this, you will need to conjugate the  auxiliary verb  avoir, but you can use a single  past participle  form of agacà ©Ã‚  for all subject pronouns. For instance, to say I annoyed, you can use jai agacà ©. Likewise, you have annoyed is tu as agace. The  ai  and  as  are conjugations of  avoir. More  Agacer  Conjugations There are a few more conjugations of  agacer  that you might want to remember, though theyre not as important.   You will find the subjunctive useful when the action is subjective. The conditional is for those times when the annoyance may or may not happen. Unless youre doing any formal French writing, you may not use the passà © simple or imperfect subjunctive. Subject Subjunctive Conditional Pass Simple Imperfect Subjunctive j agace agacerais agaai agaasse tu agaces agacerais agaas agaasses il agace agacerait agaa agat nous agacions agacerions agames agaassions vous agaciez agaceriez agates agaassiez ils agacent agaceraient agacrent agaassent There may also be times when you want to use the imperative. This is particularly true for  agacer  because its a short, rather direct command or request. When using the imperative, you can forget about the subject pronoun and skip right to the verb. Rather than tu agace, you can use agace. Imperative (tu) agace (nous) agaons (vous) agacez

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

5 Types of Errors When Representing Numbers

5 Types of Errors When Representing Numbers 5 Types of Errors When Representing Numbers 5 Types of Errors When Representing Numbers By Mark Nichol Publications generally use one of two systems of referring to numbers: Spell out numbers to ten and use numerals for all larger numbers (with some exceptions such as informal usage of large round numbers such as â€Å"a thousand† or â€Å"a million†), or spell out to one hundred and use numerals otherwise (with the same exceptions). Beyond that, several subtle rules and conventions exist, often pertaining to use of punctuation and other symbols such as hyphens. This post presents five sentences that include types of errors pertaining to such use; each example is accompanied by a discussion and a revision. 1. The twelve jurors deliberated for 21/2 days before reaching their unanimous verdict. In a mixed fraction, the fractional element must be separated from the whole number with a letter space (unless the second element is formatted as a case fraction, with small numerals set vertically above and below a horizontal line): â€Å"The twelve jurors deliberated for 2 1/2 days before reaching their unanimous verdict.† 2. To that end, we suggested in 2014 12 ways our product contributes value. Two separate numerals placed consecutively, even when separated by punctuation, can confuse the reader’s eye, so recast the sentence so that the numerals are not adjacent: â€Å"To that end, in 2014, we suggested 12 ways our product contributes value.† (As mentioned above, many publications style numerals one hundred and below as words, which would obviate the problem shown here, but the publication this sentence is excerpted from uses Associated Press style, which spells out numerals only up to ten.) 3. An overwhelming majority of 18-to-29-year-olds get news from social media like Facebook. Number ranges involving more than just a pair of numbers are often treated using suspensive hyphenation, with the second element of a phrasal adjective, which would normally be repeated in two similar phrases, elided because it the omitted element is obvious from the context. Here, no symbol serves to bridge the number range; that function is performed by to, and the hyphens link elements of a phrasal adjective: â€Å"An overwhelming majority of 18- to 29-year-olds get news from social media like Facebook. (In a sentence referring, for example, to people ages 18–29, the symbol used is often an en dash, not a hyphen, though many newspapers and some other publications use the latter symbol.) 4. More than four-out-of-five members of that demographic use social media sources to read and watch news reports. The expression â€Å"four out of five† does not require hyphens; the phrase accompanies but does not modify members, so is not a phrasal adjective: â€Å"More than four out of five members of that demographic use social media sources to read and watch news reports.† (The same is true if numerals are used in place of words.) 5. 80-percent believe the region is a great place for career growth, 88-percent say it’s a prime place for innovation, and 70-percent say the Bay Areas economy is better than the national one. By convention, a number that begins a sentence is spelled out regardless of the prevailing style about spelling out numbers or using numerals, and numbers representing percentages are not hyphenated to the word percent: â€Å"Eighty percent believe the region is a great place for career growth, 88 percent say it’s a prime place for innovation, and 70 percent say the Bay Areas economy is better than the national one.† Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Style category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:How to Format a US Business Letter40 Synonyms for â€Å"Different†A Yes-and-No Answer About Hyphenating Phrases